Political Football: The Geopolitics of the 2026 World Cup
Small World, Big Problems di JHU SAIS Philip Merrill Center for Strategic Studies
Note sull'episodio
Professor Edward P. Joseph sits down with incoming second-year MAIR student Manolo Prestamo for a wide-ranging conversation on the geopolitics of the 2026 World Cup. As the tournament unfolds across North America, the two examine how the world's most-watched sporting event has become a mirror of global politics.
They discuss the prominence of immigrant and dual-national players on national teams amid an increasingly charged global discourse on migration, and what the absence of major powers — Russia, banned from international competition, and China, unable to qualify — reveals about the shifting relationship between sporting prestige and geopolitical standing.
The conversation also turns to the politics playing out in the stands, from some Iranian supporters waving pre-revolutionary monarchist flags to the broader ways fans use the ...